Vogue Wants You to Start Coloring Again

This summer, several research articles were released encouraging adults to take up coloring again as a form of therapy. If you’ve been looking into breaking out the Crayola box per this suggestion, why not combine it with your love for fashion? This November, Vogue is releasing a coloring book using illustrations and designs from its 1950s archives. Yes, you can reimagine designs from Christian Dior, Balenciaga, and even Givenchy—oh my!

Don’t want to wait until November? Us neither. Scroll down for a sneak peek of what you’ll be coloring in next month, and if you happen to print one of these out, post it on Instagram and use the hashtag #voguecoloringbook!

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

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(Image credit: British Vogue)

Which illustration is your favorite? Leave it in the comments below!

Nicole Kliest
Freelance Contributor

Nicole Kliest is a freelance writer and editor based in New York City who focuses on fashion, travel, food, wine, and pretty much anything else that's amusing to write about. After graduating from Pepperdine University with a bachelor's in journalism and creative writing, she started her career back in 2010 as Who What Wear's photo editor and throughout the last decade has contributed to publications including Fashionista, Harper's Bazaar, Elle, The Zoe Report, PopSugar, Fodor's Travel, and several others. She also copywrites and has worked with clients such as Frame, Sea, 3x1, Intelligentsia, and others to develop brand voices through storytelling and creative marketing. She's very passionate about the ways we can improve our sustainability efforts in the fashion industry as well as cultivating content that's diverse and inclusive of all people. When she's not checking out the latest restaurant opening in her West Village neighborhood or riding her bicycle along the West Side Highway, she can be found scheming her next trip somewhere around the world. (Up next is Vienna.)